From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Sep 15 2002 - 14:37:53 MDT
Bush to U.N.: 'Show some backbone'
CAMP DAVID, Md. (APOnline) ” President Bush made plain 
Saturday that the United States is willing to take Iraq on alone if 
the United Nations fails to "show some backbone" by confronting 
Saddam Hussein. "Enough is enough," Bush said. "The U.N. will 
either be able to function as a peacekeeping body as we head into 
the 21st century, or it will be irrelevant. And that's what we're 
about to find out," Bush said Saturday. He added: "Make no 
mistake about it. If we have to deal with the problem, we'll deal 
with it." 
Vice President Dick Cheney echoed Bush. "We'd prefer to do this 
on an international basis with the approval and cooperation and 
support of other nations," he said in a CNN interview. "This is 
deemed to be such an important issue and such an important 
problem that we will address (it) by ourselves if we have to." 
Bush spoke alongside Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, the 
second foreign leader in two weeks to visit Bush at Camp David 
for strategy sessions on Iraq. 
Berlusconi, who has laid out a case in support of ousting the Iraqi 
president, has insisted that any action be taken with the U.N's 
approval. 
He joined Bush in warning that the U.N.'s credibility was on the 
line. "The United Nations cannot continue to see its image 
undermined and its resolutions flouted," Berlusconi said through a 
translator. Italy will play a key role through its ties to European 
Union countries and through its "special friendship" with Russia, 
he said. 
Repeating the case he outlined at the United Nations on Thursday, 
Bush said Saddam had "stiffed the world 16 times" by defying 
U.N. resolutions on Iraq's weapons programs. 
Asked why Iraq deserved another chance to comply, Bush said the 
standoff was as much a test of the United Nations as of Saddam. 
"This is the chance for the United Nations to show some backbone 
and resolve as we confront the true challenges of the 21st 
century," Bush said. 
The administration is seeking a new U.N. resolution giving Iraq a 
firm deadline, just weeks way, to disarm or face dire, but thus far 
unspecified, consequences. Discussions at the United Nations 
continue into this week on a range of issues, chiefly what action to 
take if Saddam continues to reject such an arrangement. 
James Baker, a secretary of state under Bush's father, said the 
resolution must endorse "all necessary means" to back up the 
deadline. Weapons inspectors "should be backed up with a United 
Nations security force on Iraqi soil, preferably under U.S. 
command, with the means (and under clear orders) to thwart all 
attempts by Iraq to block or delay the inspectors," Baker wrote in 
Sunday's Washington Post. 
Baker said the United States should go it alone, if necessary. 
"Acting alone or with a few key allies will make the undertaking 
more costly ” politically, economically and in terms of other 
U.S. foreign policy interests," he said. "But sadly, doing nothing is 
potentially the most costly strategy of all." 
Russian President Vladimir Putin has cited Bush's reasoning in 
arguing that Russia has the right to take action against Chechen 
rebels he calls terrorists in the former Soviet republic of Georgia. 
Bush sidestepped a question about whether he thought that action 
would be justified. But he said he had "made it very clear to the 
Georgian government that we expected them to rout out the al-
Qaeda-type terrorists" in the region, and said the United States is 
training Georgian troops for that purpose. 
Moreover, he said he had told Putin to "give the Georgians a 
chance to achieve a common objective," one also important to 
Russia and the United States ” capturing al-Qaeda members and 
bringing them to justice. 
After talking to reporters, Bush and Berlusconi met for two hours. 
Bush also devoted his weekly radio address to Iraq, seeking to 
sway public opinion as he lobbies Congress and foreign leaders. 
"The issue is straightforward," Bush said in the radio address, 
broadcast before Berlusconi's arrival at Camp David. 
"We must choose between a world of fear, or a world of progress. 
We must stand up for our security and for the demands of human 
dignity. By heritage and choice, the United States will make that 
stand. The world community must do so as well."
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